Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, 24105 Kiel, Germany. Author to whom any correspondence should be addressed.
Physiol Meas. 2020 Feb 5;41(1):015006. doi: 10.1088/1361-6579/ab668f.
Development of wearable medical technology for remote monitoring of patients suffering from chronic lung diseases may improve the care, therapy and outcome of these patients.
A multimodal system using wearable sensors for the acquisition of multiple biosignals (electrical bioimpedance of the chest for electrical impedance tomography and respiratory rate assessment, peripheral oxygen saturation, chest sounds, electrocardiography for heart rate measurement, body activity, and posture) was developed and validated in a prospective, monocentric study on 50 healthy subjects. The subjects were studied under different types of ventilation (tidal and deep breathing, forced full expiration maneuver) and during increased body activity and posture changes. The major goals were to assess the functionality by determining the presence and plausibility of the signals, comfort of wearing and safety of the vest.
All intended signals were recorded. Streaming of selected signals and wireless download of complete data sets were functional. Electrical impedance tomography recordings revealed good to excellent quality of detection of ventilation-related impedance changes in 34 out of 50 participants. Respiratory and heart rates were reliably detected and generally in physiological ranges. Peripheral oxygen saturation values were unphysiologically low. The chest sound recordings did not show waveforms allowing meaningful analysis of lung sounds. Body activity and posture were correctly identified. The comfort of wearing and the vest properties were positively rated. No adverse events occurred.
Albeit the full functionality of the current vest design was not established, the study confirmed the feasibility of remote functional chest monitoring with a marked increase in clinically relevant information compared to existing systems.
开发可穿戴医疗技术,对慢性肺部疾病患者进行远程监测,可能改善这些患者的护理、治疗和预后。
采用多模态系统,使用可穿戴传感器采集多种生物信号(胸部电阻抗用于获取电阻抗断层成像和呼吸率评估、外周血氧饱和度、胸部音、心电图用于心率测量、身体活动和姿势),在一项前瞻性、单中心的 50 例健康受试者研究中进行了开发和验证。研究对象在不同类型的通气(潮气和深呼吸、强制完全呼气动作)以及增加的身体活动和姿势变化下进行研究。主要目标是通过确定信号的存在和合理性、佩戴舒适性和背心的安全性来评估功能。
记录了所有预期的信号。选定信号的流传输和完整数据集的无线下载功能正常。电阻抗断层成像记录显示,在 50 名参与者中的 34 名中,良好到极好的质量检测到与通气相关的阻抗变化。可靠地检测到呼吸和心率,且通常在生理范围内。外周血氧饱和度值异常低。胸部音记录未显示允许对肺部声音进行有意义分析的波形。正确识别身体活动和姿势。佩戴舒适性和背心性能得到了积极评价。未发生不良事件。
尽管当前背心设计的全部功能尚未确定,但该研究证实了使用远程功能胸部监测的可行性,与现有系统相比,提供了显著增加的临床相关信息。